Date : Wed, 12 Jul 2006 22:55:47 +0100
From : "Ian Wolstenholme" <BBCMailingList@...>
Subject: Re: The Beeb BBs Project
Econet uses ports. There are certain ports reserved for communicating with
the file server and port 0 is reserved for transmitting or receiving on all
ports. There
is information on Econet protocol in the Econet System User Guide and the
Econet Advanced User Guide, both available in the Econet section@...
Best wishes,
Ian
----- Original Message -----
From: Philip Pemberton
To: Rob <robert@...>
Cc: Ian Wolstenholme <BBCMailingList@...>,bbc-micro@...
Sent: Wed, 12 Jul 2006 19:25:22 +0100
Subject: Re: [BBC-Micro] The Beeb BBs Project
Rob wrote:
> Now what would be interesting is if you were to use an Econet-Ethernet
> bridge (were we just waiting on software to finish that project?) to
> directly hang the MDFS on the internet; that way the rest of us could access
> it directly, either using the same to get a beeb online, or directly from an
> emulator ..!
I'd love to have a go at building an Eco->Ether translator, but I don't have
any Econet-enabled machines, nor do I have any clock boxes and what not.
Does Econet have any concept of "ports" (like TCP/IP) or is it a single-port
system?
Personally I'd have the Ethernet box get the lower two octets from the Econet
network and machine addresses, and then set the upper two in hardware (telnet
in on a certain port and change it - but add a jumper to allow the IP to be
reset to a default). Use the 10.x.x.x range and you've got room for 256
different "supernetworks". No bridging between them, though. Well, not without
some protocol trickery anyway :-/
--
Phil. | Kitsune: Acorn RiscPC SA202 64M+6G ViewFinder
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